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Thursday, March 3, 2011

India Train Fire Muslim Assailants Sentenced To Death that race was a factor in Gujarat state n


 An Indian court sentenced 11 Muslims to death Tuesday after finding them guilty of setting fire to a train in which 60 Hindus were killed nine years ago, an act that triggered one of India's worst outbursts of communal violence.
The 11 were among the 31 Muslims who were convicted last week of being part of a criminal conspiracy that led to the deaths of 60 people in the fire on the Sabarmati Express train coach packed with Hindu pilgrims in western Gujarat state in 2002. Judge P.R. Patel sentenced the remaining 20 defendants to life in prison, prosecutor J.M. Panchal said. Sixty-three others were acquitted, including Maulvi Umarji, a local politician who prosecutors said was the leader of the mob that set fire to the train.
The train deaths set off days of communal riots when Hindu mobs rampaged through Muslim neighborhoods, towns and villages in Gujarat from February to April 2002. Most of the dead were Muslims.
The religious violence was among India's worst since its independence from Britain in 1947, and the case laid bare the animosity between the groups.
Many insist that the fire was an accident, as determined by an independent probe in 2006. But others, including a 2008 commission set up by the state government, insist it was planned by Muslims.
The government, which is controlled by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, has been accused by the opposition and the media of not doing enough to stop the violence and of even stoking it. Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who was at the helm when the fire and rioting happened, remains in power, and his officials deny the charge.
Meanwhile, India's Supreme Court has criticized the Modi government for its handling of cases against the Hindus rioters: No one has been convicted in the Muslim deaths and half of the more than 4,000 cases registered after the riots have been dropped for lack of evidence.
Defense attorney I.M. Munshi said Tuesday that those convicted would appeal against the verdict in a higher court. They have 90 days to do so.
The trial began in 2009 with charges against 94 people accused of involvement in the train fire. More than 250 witnesses gave evidence in the court, which ruled that the fire was a "pre-planned act."


There are new developments in ESPN baseball writer Howard Bryant's arrest.
Buz Eisenberg, Bryant's lawyer, claimed on Tuesday that race was a factor in the assault allegations surrounding the 42-year-old.
''Mr. Bryant was the victim of excessive force,'' Eisenberg said, according to Recorder.com. ''Police responded to the scene and rather than do an investigation they made an arrest of a black man with a white wife."
Bryant's wife, Veronique Bryant, denied the allegation that her husband assaulted her in a phone interview with Jessica Heslam of The Boston Herald.
Bryant was arrested on Saturday charged with domestic assault and battery, assault and battery on a police officer and resisting arrest. Five witnesses said they saw Bryant choke his wife and pushed her into a car.
He pleaded not guilty on Monday.

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